What was advertised in a revolutionary American newspaper 250 years ago today?

“A Press, in all probability will be continued, and a public Paper regularly printed each week.”
A notice “To the SUBSCRIBERS for THOMAS’s Massachusetts-Spy” in the May 31, 1776, edition informed that that “this week’s paper compleats the twelve month with most of the Subscribers.” With the period for an annual subscription coming to an end, Isaiah Thomas “earnestly begs his good Customers would settle with him as soon as possible.” That was even more imperative because the printer “proposes removing to Boston.” Thomas had not intended to settle in Worcester. In the winter and spring of 1775, he advertised plans to open a printing office in that town and set up a junior partner to oversee the business there, including publishing Worcester’s first newspaper. Events in Boston, however, prompted Thomas to flee to Worcester and run the printing office himself. He left shortly before the battles at Lexington and Concord and continued printing the Massachusetts Spy in Worcester during the siege of Boston. After British forces evacuated the city on March 17, 1776, he contemplated returning to Boston.
What did that mean for Worcester? Thomas expressed appreciation “to all those who have encouraged him in his business the year past” and declared that he “is willing to do what lays in his power towards continuing a Printing-Office in Worcester.” With most of the annual subscriptions for Thomas’s Massachusetts Spy coming to an end, he needed to assess demand for continuing to publish a newspaper there. To that end, he requested that “all those who incline to take papers from this town, and support the press, … would give in their names by Friday the 6th day of June.” At that time, he would publish a handbill “for the Subscribers” with more information and collect subscription fees not yet paid. Whether the printing office and Worcester’s first local newspaper closed depended on how many subscribers made a commitment to supporting the venture. “[I]f a sufficient number of Subscribers appear, to continue and support the publication of a news-paper in this Town,” Thomas advised, “a Press, in all probability will be continued, and a public Paper regularly printed each week.” With the May 31 edition, the printer suspended publication of the newspaper, yet his notice gained that “sufficient number of Subscribers” that three weeks later William Stearns and Daniel Bigelow distributed a new issue on June 21. They altered the title from Thomas’s Massachusetts Spy to the Massachusetts Spy. Two years later, Thomas returned to Worcester, resumed his role as printer, and changed the title back to Thomas’s Massachusetts Spy.


















